I wonder if one of the biggest problemas with the PS3 is not the price but the current market situation.
Look at the past generations of consoles. The main difference between them was that the consoles
became more powerful, the medias evolved from cartriges to CDs and DVDs but the way the consoles
worked didn't change that much with them being standalone devices. Yes, the PS2 for example could
play DVDs but still, 99% of the time it was a standalone device.
What happend then? XBox Live open the doors for people to play online and offers online services.
Nintendo developed a new way to play and opened the market of the casual player and some online services too.
Meanwhile the PS3, even having online services and a BR player, looks as it was designed for the
same market that the PS2 lived in. It has innovation in the tecnologies it uses, in the hardware, but
doesn't bring much new outside of the console's case.
People do not see so much value anymore on the console's graphics os cutting edge technologies, but
on the gameplay and services that come with the console. Perhaps if Sony changes the focus of the
PS3 targeting one or more of the strong points proven by X360 and Wii as having a hi value for
costumes, they could revert the current situation.









